Contracts and Computation — Formal modelling and analysis for normative natural language
Abstract
Whether we are aware of it or not, our digital lives are governed by contracts of various kinds, such as privacy policies, software licenses, service agreements, and regulations. At their essence, normative documents like these dictate the permissions, obligations, and prohibitions of two or more parties entering into an agreement, including the penalties which must be paid when someone breaks the rules. Such documents are often lengthy and hard to understand, and most people tend to agree to these legally binding contracts without ever reading them.
Our goal is to create tools which can take a natural language document as input and allow an end user to easily ask questions about its implications, getting back meaningful answers in natural language within a reasonable amount of time. We do this by bringing formal methods to the analysis of normative texts, investigating how they can be effectively modelled and the kinds of automatic processing that these models enable.
This thesis includes six research papers by the author which cover the various aspects of this approach: entity recognition and modality extraction from natural language, controlled natural languages and visual diagrams as interfaces for modelling, logical formalisms which can be used for contract representation, and analysis via syntactic filtering, trace evaluation, random testing, and model checking. These components are then combined into a prototype tool for end users, allowing for end-to-end analysis of normative texts in natural language.
Parts of work
I. John J. Camilleri and Gerardo Schneider. “Modelling and Analysis of Normative Documents”. In: Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming 91 (2017), pp. 33–59.::doi::10.1016/j.jlamp.2017.05.002 II. Runa Gulliksson and John J. Camilleri. “A Domain-Specific Language for Normative Texts with Timing Constraints”. In: International Symposium on Temporal Representation and Reasoning (TIME 2016). IEEE, 2016, pp. 60–69.::doi::10.1109/TIME.2016.14 III. Krasimir Angelov, John J. Camilleri, and Gerardo Schneider. “A Framework for Conflict Analysis of Normative Texts Written in Controlled Natural Language”. In: Logic and Algebraic Programming 82.5-7 (2013), pp. 216–240.::doi::10.1016/j.jlap.2013.03.002 IV. John J. Camilleri, Gabriele Paganelli, and Gerardo Schneider. “A CNL for Contract-Oriented Diagrams”. In: International Workshop on Controlled Natural Language (CNL 2014). Vol. 8625. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer, 2014, pp. 135–146.::doi::10.1007/978-3-319-10223-8_13 V. John J. Camilleri, Normunds Grūzītis, and Gerardo Schneider. “Extracting Formal Models from Normative Texts”. In: International Conference on Applications of Natural Language to Information Systems (NLDB 2016). Vol. 9612. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer, 2016, pp. 403–408.::doi::10.1007/978-3-319-41754-7_40 VI. John J. Camilleri, Mohammad Reza Haghshenas, and Gerardo Schneider. “A Web-Based Tool for Analysing Normative Documents in English”. 2017. arXiv: 1707.03997 [cs.CL] https://arxiv.org/abs/1707.03997
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. IT-fakulteten
Institution
Department of Computer Science and Engineering ; Institutionen för data- och informationsteknik
Disputation
Onsdagen den 1 november 2017, kl. 10.00, HC3, Hörsalsvägen 14
Date of defence
2017-11-01
john.j.camilleri@cse.gu.se
Date
2017-10-11Author
Camilleri, John J.
Keywords
normative texts
contract analysis
controlled natural language
model checking
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-982237-4-3
Series/Report no.
145D
Language
eng